# remote_syslog Ruby daemon & sender Lightweight Ruby daemon to tail one or more log files and transmit UDP syslog messages to a remote syslog host (centralized log aggregation). remote_syslog generates UDP packets itself instead of depending on a system syslog daemon, so its configuration doesn't affect system-wide logging - syslog is just the transport. Uses: * collecting logs from servers & daemons which don't natively support syslog * when reconfiguring the system logger is less convenient than a purpose-built daemon (e.g., automated app deployments) * aggregating files not generated by daemons (e.g., package manager logs) The library can also be used to generate one-off log messages from Ruby code. Tested with the hosted log management service [Papertrail] and should work for transmitting to any syslog server. ## Installation Install the gem, which includes a binary called "remote_syslog": $ [sudo] gem install remote_syslog Optionally, create a log_files.yml with the log file paths to read and the host/port to log to (see examples/[log_files.yml.example][sample config]). These can also be specified as command-line arguments (below). ## Usage Usage: remote_syslog [OPTION]... ... Options: -c, --configfile PATH Path to config (/etc/log_files.yml) -d, --dest-host HOSTNAME Destination syslog hostname or IP (logs.papertrailapp.com) -p, --dest-port PORT Destination syslog port (514) -D, --no-detach Don't daemonize and detach from the terminal -f, --facility FACILITY Facility (user) --hostname HOST Local hostname to send from -P, --pid-dir DIRECTORY DEPRECATED: Directory to write .pid file in --pid-file FILENAME Location of the PID file (default /var/run/remote_syslog.pid) --parse-syslog Parse file as syslog-formatted file -s, --severity SEVERITY Severity (notice) --strip-color Strip color codes --tls Connect via TCP with TLS --tcp Connect via TCP (no TLS) --new-file-check-interval INTERVAL Time between checks for new files Advanced options: --[no-]eventmachine-tail Enable or disable using eventmachine-tail --debug-log FILE Log internal debug messages --debug-level LEVEL Log internal debug messages at level Common options: -h, --help Show this message --version Show version Example: $ remote_syslog -c configs/logs.yml -p 12345 /var/log/mysqld.log ## Example Typical: $ remote_syslog Daemonize and collect messages from files listed in `./config/logs.yml` as well as the file `/var/log/mysqld.log`. Send to port `logs.papertrailapp.com:12345`: $ remote_syslog -c configs/logs.yml -p 12345 /var/log/mysqld.log Stay attached to the terminal, look for and use `/etc/log_files.yml` if it exists, write PID to `/tmp/remote_syslog.pid`, and send with facility local0 to `a.example.com:514`: $ remote_syslog -D -d a.example.com -f local0 --pid-file /tmp/remote_syslog.pid /var/log/mysqld.log ### Windows To run in Windows, start in a DOS Prompt or batch file (does not automatically run in the background): C:\> remote_syslog -D ## Auto-starting at boot The gem includes sample [init files] such as [remote_syslog.init.d]. remote_syslog will daemonize by default. You may be able to: $ cp examples/remote_syslog.init.d /etc/init.d/remote_syslog ## Sending messages securely ## If the receiving system supports sending syslog over TCP with TLS, you can pass the `--tls` option when running `remote_syslog`: $ remote_syslog --tls -p 1234 /var/log/mysqld.log ## Configuration By default, the gem looks for a configuration in /etc/log_files.yml. The gem comes with a [sample config]. Optionally: $ cp examples/log_files.yml.example /etc/log_files.yml log_files.yml has filenames to log from (as an array) and hostname and port to log to (as a hash). Wildcards are supported using * and standard shell globbing. Filenames given on the command line are additive to those in the config file. Only 1 destination server is supported; the command-line argument wins. files: - /var/log/httpd/access_log - /var/log/httpd/error_log - /var/log/mysqld.log - /var/run/mysqld/mysqld-slow.log destination: host: logs.papertrailapp.com port: 12345 remote_syslog sends the name of the file without a path ("mysqld.log") as the syslog tag (program name). RFCs 3164 and 5424 limit the tag to 32 characters. Longer filenames are truncated to 32 characters. ## Advanced Configuration (Optional) Here's an [advanced config] which uses all options. ### Override hostname Provide `--hostname somehostname` or use the `hostname` configuration option: hostname: somehostname ### Verify server certificate Provide the public key for the remote host when using TLS: ssl_server_cert: syslog.crt ### Use a client certificate Provide a client certificate when connecting via TLS: ssl_client_cert_chain: syslog_client.crt ssl_client_private_key: syslog_client.key ### Detecting new files remote_syslog automatically detects and activates new log files that match its file specifiers. For example, `*.log` may be provided as a file specifier, and remote_syslog will detect a `some.log` file created after it was started. Globs are re-checked every 60 seconds. Ruby's `Dir.glob` is used. Also, explicitly-provided filenames need not exist when `remote_syslog` is started. `remote_syslog` can be pre-configured to monitor log files which are created later (or may never be created). If globs are specified on the command-line, enclose each one in single-quotes (`'*.log'`) so the shell passes the raw glob string to remote_syslog (rather than the current set of matches). This is not necessary for globs defined in the config file. ### Excluding files from being sent Provide one or more regular expressions to prevent certain files from being matched. exclude_files: - \.\d$ - .bz2 - .gz ### Multiple instances Run multiple instances to support more than one message-specific file format or to specify unique syslog hostnames. To do that, provide an alternate PID path as a command-line option to the additional instance(s). For example: --pid-file /var/run/remote_syslog_2.pid ### Parse fields from log messages Rarely needed. Usually only used when remote_syslog is watching files generated by syslogd (rather than by apps), like ``/var/log/messages``. remote_syslog can parse the program and hostname from the log line. When one file contains logs from multiple programs (like with syslog), the log line may include text that is not part of the log message, like a timestamp, hostname, or program name. remote_syslog will extract those and use them in the corresponding syslog packet fields. To do that, use the config file option `parse_fields` with the name of a format supported by remote_syslog, or your own regex. Included format names are `syslog` and `rfc3339`. For example: parse_fields: syslog The included `syslog` format uses the regex `(\w+ \d+ \S+) (\S+) ([^:]+): (.*)` to parse standard syslog lines like this: Jul 18 08:25:08 hostname programname[1234]: The log message The included `rfc3339` format uses the regex `(\S+) (\S+) ([^: ]+):? (.*)` to parse syslog lines with high-precision RFC 3339 timestamps, like this: 2011-07-16T08:25:08.651413-07:00 hostname programname[1234]: The log message To parse a format other than those, provide your own regex. It should include 4 backreferences to parse, in order: timestamp, system name, program name, message. Match and return empty strings for any empty positions where the log line doesn't provide a value. For example, given the log message: something-meaningless The log message One could use a regex to ignore "something-meaningless" (and not to extract a program or hostname). To ignore that prefix and return 3 empty values then the log message, use parse_fields with this regex: parse_fields: "something-meaningless ()()()(.*)" Per-file regexes are not supported. Run multiple instances with different config files. ### Excluding lines matching a pattern There may be certain log messages that you do not want to be sent. These may repetitive log lines that are "noise" that you might not be able to filter out easily from the respective application. To filter these lines, use the exclude_patterns with an array or regexes: exclude_patterns: - exclude this - \d+ things ### Choosing app name remote_syslog uses the log file name (like "access_log") as the syslog program name, or what the syslog RFCs call the "tag." This is ideal unless remote_syslog watches many files that have the same name. In that case, tell remote_syslog to set another program name by creating symbolic link to the generically-named file: cd /path/to/logs ln -s generic_name.log unique_name.log Point remote_syslog at unique_name.log. It will use that as the program name. ## Reporting bugs 1. See whether the issue has already been reported: 2. If you don't find one, create an issue with a repro case. ## Contributing Once you've made your great commits: 1. [Fork][fk] remote_syslog 2. Create a topic branch - `git checkout -b my_branch` 3. Commit the changes without changing the Rakefile or other files unrelated to your enhancement. 4. Push to your branch - `git push origin my_branch` 5. Create a Pull Request or an [Issue][is] with a link to your branch 6. That's it! [sample config]: https://github.com/papertrail/remote_syslog/blob/master/examples/log_files.yml.example [init files]: https://github.com/papertrail/remote_syslog/blob/master/examples/ [remote_syslog.init.d]: https://github.com/papertrail/remote_syslog/blob/master/examples/remote_syslog.init.d [advanced config]: https://github.com/papertrail/remote_syslog/blob/master/examples/log_files.yml.example.advanced [fk]: http://help.github.com/forking/ [is]: https://github.com/papertrail/remote_syslog/issues/ [Papertrail]: http://papertrailapp.com/